Contact

Dr. Smallwood has over 30 years experience as a practicing hospital pharmacist with
15 years as a clinical pharmacy specialist with a liver transplant team. He comes
to PCOM School of Pharmacy from the School of Medicine at Emory University. He has
published over 40 peer-reviewed articles, has made numerous national and international
scientific presentations, is on the editorial board of Annals of Pharmacotherapy,
and is a grant reviewer for the country of Qatar.

Dr. Smallwood has been an investigator or co-investigator of more than 40 human clinical
trials. His research interest includes immunology, transplant, and diabetes with his
most recent work being with the Immune Tolerance Network (ITN) using immunosuppressants
in treating Type 1 diabetes which is funded by the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Disease (NIAID) of the National Institute of Health (NIH).

Education

PharmD, University of Georgia College of Pharmacy, 2001
BS (Phr), University of Georgia College of Pharmacy,1979

Courses

Dr. Smallwood currently coordinates several courses within the School of Pharmacy.
He teaches the Clinical Pharmacy course for P3 students as well as coordinates the
Sterile Laboratory associated with this course. He also teaches in several of the
integrated therapeutics courses for the P3 students. For the P2 students in the School
of Pharmacy he coordinates Pharmacokinetics.

Awards

Honors/Awards

Elected as a Fellow of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP). October 21,
2012 at the 2012 Annual Meeting in Hollywood, Florida.

President Choice Award, Emergence of drug resistance cytomegalovirus following liver
transplantation. American Association for the Study of Liver Disease (AASLD) annual
meeting. November 12-15, 2005; San Francisco, CA

Recipient of an Award of Excellence in Pharmacy. Relationship between immunosuppression
and osteoporosis in an outpatient liver transplant clinic. 3rd International Congress
on Immunosuppression. December, 2004 - Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego, San Diego,
CA

President Choice Award, Increased survival in pediatric acute hepatic failure following
liver transplantation with early surgical intervention utilizing living donor, partial
grafts, and ABO incompatible grafts. American Association for the Study of Liver Disease
(AASLD) annual meeting. November 2005; San Francisco, CA

International Committee member to develop a non-adherence consensus statement in solid
organ transplantation for the American Society of Transplantation(AST), American Society
of Transplant Surgeons(ASTS), and the International Pediatric Transplant Society(IPTS)